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The venerable uucp program isn't used much anymore because with the ubiquitous Internet, modem to modem communication isn't needed much anymore. However, uucp runs over tcp/ip also and can be convenient and useful in certain situations, so it isn't entirely dead: uucp and xc is an example of where it might still be useful.
You don't have to worry about network failures: uucp will make sure the job gets done as soon as connectivity is back. You don't have to worry about logging either. You can stagger large distributions by specifying acceptable usage times for different machines. Most of the nitty gritty details are already taken care of: you just issue the uucp command and forget about it.
Normally, uucp would be configured to spool file transfer requests and attempt the transfer during certain time periods (when phone rates were low or during periods where machine load was less). You could also manually force a dial attempt with "uutry machinename" but if insufficient time had elapsed between attempts, you'd get something like "retry time (2400) not reached" (the 2400 is configurable). You could over-ride that with "uutry -r machinename".
There is a lot of general uucp information at Questions and Answers about Serial Communications and UUCP
uucp was even used for mail: UUCP and Sendmail and Replacing UUCP Mail.
Communications issues between uucp machines: linux to sco uucp login problem
Set up uucp to use tcp/ip: UUCP over TCP/IP

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